Carl
Icahn calls BlackRock a 'dangerous' company, cites ETF
concerns
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[July 16, 2015]
By Sam Forgione
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Billionaire activist
investor Carl Icahn on Wednesday lambasted BlackRock Inc, the world's
largest asset manager, as an "extremely dangerous company" because of
the prevalence of its exchange-traded fund products, which Icahn deems
illiquid.
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"They sell liquidity," Icahn said in reference to BlackRock's ETF
business. "There is no liquidity. That’s my point. And that’s what’s
going to blow this up."
Icahn was speaking at the CNBC Institutional Investor Delivering
Alpha Conference in New York, sharing the stage with Larry Fink,
chief executive of BlackRock. Icahn said he was concerned about the
amount of money invested in high-yield ETFs, which he called
"overpriced."
Icahn said that when the Federal Reserve hikes interest rates,
investors would likely sell their high-yield ETFs, and that he
feared the consequences of such a sell-off since he said there would
be nobody to buy them. Icahn has previously said he believes the
high-yield bond market was in a bubble.
Fink countered that Icahn's characterizations of ETFs were "dead
wrong" and that the index funds were just "a tool for buying
exposure." Fink also said that ETFs "create more price transparency
than anything in the bond market today," especially in high-yield.
The U.S. ETF market has roughly $2.1 trillion in assets, according
to ETF.com.
Fink also said higher interest rates would result in more money
flowing into the bond market. He reiterated that the Fed would
likely raise rates in September and that normalization of the Fed's
funds rates would be good for the economy.
On activist investors, Fink said: "there are good ones and there are
some bad ones." Fink said BlackRock would continue to be in "deep
dialogue" with companies the firm has issues with.
Earlier this year, Fink urged the top executives of the 500 largest
publicly listed U.S. companies to take a long-term approach to
create value for shareholders or risk losing his firm's support.
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In a letter to the chief executive officers of the S&P 500 index
dated March 31, Fink asked the companies to avoid short-term
pressures created by the increasing activist shareholder activity of
recent years.
Fink repeated that sentiment Wednesday and said: "There is a growing
network of activists who have now focused on more short-term proxy
harassment ... they're in for one or two years."
He also said that he was "deeply worried" about excessive share
repurchases on behalf of companies, instead of companies growing
capital investment, research and development, and hiring.
In 2014, dividends and buybacks in the United States totaled $900
billion, the highest ever, according to Fink's letter.
BlackRock had $4.7 trillion in assets under management at the end of
the second quarter.
(Reporting by Sam Forgione; Editing by Jennifer Ablan and Bernard
Orr)
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